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Many young
musicians have parents who are less than supportive when artistic
aspirations are announced. It’s understandable. After all, becoming
a doctor, lawyer or accountant are safe career bets. Donning a
guitar, writing songs and pounding on club doors for gigs? Not so
much.
But Nic Cowan never had that worry. When the native Texan and
transplanted Atlantan decided to get serious about his musical
career, he turned to the professional musician he knew best—his dad,
a drummer who regularly gigged with folk, country and jazz
ensembles. As an aspiring frontman and solo artist, the younger
Cowan wanted dad’s ideas on what it would take to be successful. And
dad, who’d played behind more than a few frontmen—good, bad and
indifferent—was more than happy to lay aside his sticks to drop some
wisdom.
“He said the key is to be completely original,” Cowan recalls.
“Don’t do something that people can categorize easily. You want them
not to be able to put a label on you. You can be an amazing singer,
amazing player, amazing songwriter, but if you sound like something
that’s already out there, then you’re not going to get far.”
Cowan clearly took that advice to heart. His Southern Ground debut,
Hard Headed, is winsomely crowd pleasing but unclassifiable—neatly
mixing southern rock, country, soul and R&B without being hewing to
any single style. Cowan’s gritty, soulful voice—redolent of whiskey,
cigarettes and dues paid—completes the package, announcing the
arrival of an artist ready for bigger stages.
Cowan already has played plenty of smaller stages to get there.
After beginning behind a kit, in imitation of his old man, he
switched to guitar in high school and immediately began seeking his
own voice, playing in a punk band and even leading worship at a
church for a number of years before stepping away from religion to
pursue the rambling troubadour’s life.
“The second I learned how to play guitar, the moment I learned three
chords, I started writing,” Cowan recalls. “The writing aspect of it
was what I really got into. I decided I wanted to be a songwriter.
And that’s still how I see myself—the rest of it is secondary”
Acoustic guitar in hand, Cowan joined the ranks of hopefuls haunting
open mic nights, playing gigs and penning a handful of originals
while juggling day jobs. Or night jobs. Or a mix of both. As he
recalls, for a time he’d work a graveyard shift at UPS, then a
seven-hour shift doing maintenance at an apartment complex and
finally an evening performance.
Sleep? Sleep is for the weak. Or for those less hungry and hard
headed.
The hard headedness—memorably captured in the album’s title
track—was an asset as Cowan shrugged off disappointing gigs and kept
plugging away, learning hours of cover tunes to please fickle
audiences. Along the way he met Francisco Vidal a booking agent who
saw promise in the guitar-slinging youngster and did his best to
keep him working regularly.
It was a scene that was repeated on a larger scale later, when Vidal
booked Cowan to open for the Zac Brown Band in Carrollton, GA.
Before the show a friend of Cowan’s sought out Brown and asked the
bandleader to check out just a few songs of his opener’s set. Brown
gladly obliged. It turned out to be a banner night, with the crowd
singing the hooks to Cowan’s tunes, and both artists ended the set
with matching grins.
I approached him after the show, thinking I’d ask for some tips,
asking what he’d do in my position,” Cowan says. “But then he said,
‘I’m going to be starting a record label and when I do, I’d love to
sign you.’ Just right there.
“I was thinking I just wanted some advice but hey, we can do that
too! So he got my number and I went over to his house and he asked
me to play every song I’d ever written. We played for hours. Later
on, we kept in contact. Five months later he signed his deal, then
had his hit.”
And not too much longer, Cowan had his deal as well, and he entered
a studio to turn his gritty, solo-acoustic songs into fleshed out,
full-band arrangements, complete with swelling Hammond B-3, backing
vocals, horns and a rock edge impossible to capture in a solo
acoustic gig. Brown provides guest vocals on “Cut It Loose,” a song
Cowan had originally written with him in mind.
Cowan’s songs are designed to spark a good time. Particularly in
tracks like “Gutter Song,” “Wrong Side” and the title track, his
bad-boy persona comes through loud and clear. But the approach is
seasoned with a humorous wink, and is interspersed with heartfelt,
laid-back cuts like “I Won’t Let Go” and “Reno.” While it’s sure to
spark audience sing-alongs, it’s not calculated in the slightest. As
Cowan sings in “New Shit”: “Let me set this straight from the start
/ I don’t do this so I get on the charts.”
As Cowan tells it, “Hard Headed” was written about a man’s
resistance to being controlled by a lover. Despite that, it’s become
a gender-spanning audience favorite. “I thought it was going to be
an anthem for men everywhere, but it turns out women love this
song,” he notes with a smirk. “They come up to me all the time,
saying, ‘that’s my jam!’ I think at the end of the day everyone
likes to think of themselves as a little bit hard headed and not
easily influenced.”
It’s an attitude still carrying Cowan today. Despite the opportunity
a record deal represents, he’s considered himself a success from the
moment he was able to leave his day jobs (and night jobs) behind and
play music full time. In fact, the building that now houses his
record label and management company was once, in a prior
incarnation, the prime destination for the UPS trucks he loaded.
It’s a compact picture of how far his talent—and hard-headedness—has
brought him already.
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Nic Cowan |
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Above all else, Alpha Rev is a journey into the depths of the human
experience.
Frontman Casey McPherson’s gripping, emotional songwriting dares others
to search out hope in the bleakest of circumstances and the unique
instrumentation pays homage to the classical music that gave him his
love for the art. While McPherson’s songwriting and rock-inspired vocals
form the core of Alpha Rev’s music, he i...s supported by a unique cast
of musicians that fill Alpha Rev’s songs with as much classical beauty
as American rock. In addition to the typical guitar, keyboard, bass, and
drums, Alpha Rev boasts a violin and cello that add brilliantly to the
band’s sound. Together, Alpha Rev offers up layered, orchestral,
melody-driven masterpieces able to turn strangers to super fans in a
single listen.
Home schooled in small town Texas, frontman Casey McPherson studied
classical piano for 12 years and learned to play guitar left handed
after figuring out it only worked when he played it upside down. The
first band he started, Endochine, performed with Staind, Red Hot Chili
Peppers, Pete Yorn and many others. During this time, McPherson lost his
father and only brother to suicide. Although Endochine was succeeding on
many levels, touring took its toll, eventually leading to the band’s
demise. Faced with unimaginable tragedy and the dissolution of his band
of five years, Casey began to realize that his music, and his life,
needed to take a turn in a more positive direction.
The result was Alpha Rev and its distinctive brand of soulful American
rock, full of achingly beautiful melodies, haunting lyrics, and
classical beauty. Welling up through all the rich, sonic splendor is a
message of hope spun by McPherson and his penchant for perseverance. As
Austin’s famous landmark club Antone’s raved on their website “witness
[McPherson] in action and you know God made this man to play music.”
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Alpha Rev |